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es Published by the Press Publishing Company, 59 to &@ PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as second-ciase matter. ent THURSDA Y JANUARY Il, 1900. see NO. 14,029 | defeated etetetebtetebte ‘Light Gymnastics for the Girls, . ‘ + ep -reyerer THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 11, 1900, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. teieielois Health, Happiness and Beauty. lols telm <pinieiedeitetetetteietietivieitnteink not Admit even t@ But ORDON would If (hat be was in love. G y lurked 1 gs. the A n his dreame that pight bahia’ The Muldoons lived just acrons the WALL EXBRCIAMS. WHOWT LSPTING TO REDUCE ABDOMMN, CHEST EXPANDER. seem from the Go: : ve Hate bind to-day are Meyond ques |help her to keep well ané charming than; that you wil! 4o yourselves injury rather] bones shoulders concerning which I re- oupednicablon oh datar mae 5 inter A tronger and| perform any other task assigned her. than geod by spasmodic physical cul-| ceive ro many written lamentations : ny 4 he their mothers and The ‘exercieas which are Mlustrated ‘ure. The apparatus required can be pur ans of tu r grandmothers. vere are performed by the ald of very, The exercises known aa weight lifting) chased at any shop where ath formet'a aca bad never co matek The dest phynical culture te found In|atmple and inexpensive apparatie ere eapecially directed toward reducing) rporting mpplies are sold, and the a word with the latter's out-of-door sporta, but all young girle| They will do e let toward taking the| ‘he sive of the waist and abdomen. outfit should com but two or three dol- we ——— |are not able to jevetep their muscles by| place of eut-of-deor sports in phywnal| TW? Whutration dows how these| jars Widow Gordon lived all alese .; ty N L__ [resin or ertmining, or wolf. evelopment. Fae cosommsal napsea. wales corner, An entire family can use these ap- with her son, whose name was Joe, an@ A LESSON FROM FATHER M’GLYNN'S FUNERAL. |". ‘rimming o roll [Aevolomma ny ot tne oeinary oft obtain region, we entrar is nces ee T is always easy to draw lessons from the lives of great men, eapectally if the great man {s as many-sided as the late Father McGlynn. Father McGlynn was great because he hed a human heart. One of the lemons of his death may be found in his express order that there should be no flowers at bis funeral. He wanted to give flowers to the living. He held out the helping hand to the weak and lowly. He gave encouragement to men and women tired of the struggle of life. His whole lite was a fight to better the condi- exerciee that make brain, musole, fair fleah and well-grown boue, bright eyes And clear, wholesuine ekine are those who are not counted among fortune’s favorites. ‘The air! I love best and honor most Jy the little daughter whose wage helps to "keep home” of parents or of wtiowed mo Bhe deserves to be pretty and atrong, make, and the thres movements {ites them- trated are simple and explain selves. They are emoatient fer Aeveloping the chest and lungs, and properly used they ntrengthen the ection of the heart. Let me again caution my girl readers About toking symnasticn with reason able moderation. woman, ‘Te chest expander will reform scrigsy tery * See ee | Fifteen minutes’ exercise with the pu! Tt to formed of a flexttte rather band | °%: expander and welghts \s enough at ettaohed to handles The movements|* "*Ane® The exerctens with the wall pulley| are tllustrated and cause an increase in should bo repeated not more than twenty| local ofreulation in chest, arms and times at a seaston. neok, which cannot fail tn @ short time ‘The rent mista to devaiop healthy, beautiful flesh to irle make ‘6 In Devote five minutes to each tinue the work systematically, day after day, but week after week and month after month. fe Odell Annie had been living with the Gow dons for two years. She was homely and scrawny, wid most of the time was sick, She was not strong enough to work in the factory nur sick enough to need @ dow tor—Just sick enough to have thin hatr and aches. Her father had been killed on the + ight saonths later her mother had died in Bellevue of mingled grief 4 who had known her mother a3 a girl in Limerick s, She was twenty. She might have been thirty ar as men were erned tions of mankind everywhere, He was great in his humanity. as well ae good and she must work all| beginning any physteal training with! cover up and fill in between the muscles’ It © & particle aw, ene Mdton was i at the : re te. She wis: us likely : oe Gt or ould |day tong, with « * holiday to thusinem and ovemtoing at first. and make that sofi ing | it sell oovanpets ailing BR A CONE OF ne ORS OF BIS aE Nets ee And his {dea that the dead need no flowers, but that the living should | day rar y freat enthu t adipose padding ashen ahebe Syne fy aa thaestin dike Hint 26a nbd ber ipa ware cartes have the roses of life strewn in their pathway, ls worth remembering. That brighten her humdrum entatence, She is my girl of girlie, and I'd rather | aistentiy performed. Try not to forget All eymnastic exercises must be per-|whioh means curves and satiny plump. Werte | BBARD AYE! tien, She had the lines of a queen is one of the best sermons he ever preached. — bs seh gM = ie woneer ine * Boh thu ween he ma her, He didn't know—or @ ne —— migl ave been different—that h: art thumped secretly for lin. WHERE CREDIT FOR THE GOLD PLANK BELONGS HOW PARENTS ARE MESSRS te CRPTads dos ad ciara i (hed oo rea ef every nce \ te all very tiresome, this talk that has been going ou ence MeKinley's election about this Senator's influence or that Congressman’s infu ence, which finally compelled the Repubjican National Convention to incorporate the gold plank tn tts platform. THE FUTURE OF t THE CHILDREN. AURA JEAN LIBBEY. : Ae eteinisininiintntiniebi- Copyright. 1990.07 the Press Publidhing Compes?, | fuces the world at one and twenty with-; The true secret of making goot, hon- RESPONSIBLE. ght would take to would look a trifle paler and, perha burdened heart, That was all Don't think young Gordon was a man to worry his head over love was too much wapped up in his trade ond his union and Henry Georg at n estan overs = oD EET RL TTR. he was in love-with Mamie Mule 400n. ri es : 4 %y he cot ! a »: of pretty figure in the tm * went to work he would . ¥ SF ¥. OF that if he caught the sound of r votce In (le xg, as che trilled o t | work of ftin, Jacob Astor once wolf apples on the it is bes no simearane aia att aay he actual drafting Nes ver Wen) pratudyesdhita odie ey Gable: Mana Hen) otal ete Beis uel lrtee panes wel bila ENG the plank. ‘The real thing p HAVA. @ very interesting letter from! He ts |aunched upon the tide of life to put them te work in their youth, be-| was at one time a ploughboy, Henry First-That the senve and judgment of the country demanded such a | ‘a mother, who says | without an oar to shape the courte of | fore their habéts are formed, and te keep| Clay was a millers chore hoy; President plank "WIN you advise me on a eubsect| nis bark, and ie necessarily at the mercy | them at it. | Lincoln spitt ratis on a farm; President Second--That the gold plank was made operative by gold Democrats | thet has cost me thuw far many an hour! of every storm that overtskes him. Tt to net necessary that a bey who! Garfield drove mules on a canal. S everywhere, who believed in the gold standard of value and voled against free silver fo them belongs the credit for the gold etandard that the nation enjoys to-day WHAT SENATOR BEVERIDGE PROVED. PPI |i talented young Senator from Indiana, in his maiden epesob tn the Senate the other day on the Philippine question, proved several | put him at some trade? ‘They eay he le eomededy to cling to to help them out. @h® things Just et the right age to leer = trade | Even the rich whe pend forth thetr Firet—That he is an orator of no mean ability. ond if I watt longer tt wilt mean a | sone tive may live to rue It. ) nd—That if we keep the Philippine Islands we must fight for trade, must murder and ravtsh in order to open un new ctmanels of comme must fiht the Filipinos with aword and qun—tin fine, that the United States must become a nation of murderers at the cost of untold sill- fon ‘ollars, if we carry out the imperialistte poliey. Careful reading of Senator Heveridge's speech will prove it te argument yet adduced AGAINST Impertalism! SEES THE WOMAN CONTEMPTUOUS ? of fird be the strongest WHO To the Ke Kventag World eft many other mothers who are trying | 7 7 : ! 7 te begin to learn then if an easier ave | helpless, watched her with aching eyes. p overcame him. Annie never sley y c ‘i at the trailing skirt? You can do nothing, Jean Paul) +. solve the same problem that lam. | | nue of living ls presented to him. . She was whiter and thinner than ever a Ricure when he says that “the woman wh not hay A MOTHER WHO I8 IN DOUBT | Hend the tree when it Isa vupling in| The priest camo for the last time, then the undertak contempt women le a very emotional creature Women My dear, 1 do not wonder that you feel | the way which you Intend that it shall | Annie and Joe sat at the ede of the black dr alone, In the ght * low many other foolish fashions, because there are | creat anxiety over a matter which calls | 6row, dear parents. athe " face of the girl, chastened now woh a nat h ruggie with oihe en wh Lit ‘They Uke to flaunt themselves, It ts thetr way] for the deapeat thought LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. |) at took on a pectiliar holy look that made it alr ifs of f t ad, Incidentally, for the opinion |. joving mother ts cap xercising | Joe gazed at her. She:had no place to housht-at tt now fon (he ae of the ma ' ke them, trailing skin for the question before you ta no light| Professor—Now, children, | went you Pelican writes shone rites Fe keds ne had no pla for the frst one The foture of your boy hangs ey ee my oe wakew Beh with tke Anite" he extd—and his voles was gruf! Lr think wea ret marrted.* #) INDLY oblige believing nothing of the kind upon tt Seonry: reese die Remiiy Goce PERLEY Px SHAN, Women are very often foolish, especially with regard to the fash-| '" ™y opinion the young men who want to get tate court! — : i ee Seer erate paisa Sone. They are vosly foolish when it comes to the particular in- |” ~ psu soos seo > rs ; < | e i ‘ iit, Many of them are also selfish, But 8) MORE CHOCOLATE TO A NAME. HARDSHIPS OF A GIRLS LIFE, | BY AND \ FOR 9) pure str at the root of about seven-elghths (pomsibly more) | a of all human action men have little grace for a diatribe against the other =~ bd ox 08 that point # EVENING WORLD READERS. However when a philosopher of any degree sets out to sustain he ide | | \ that comempt for her sisterhood ts a foundation mark {m the average wo- a om hy aa the elriot deal Py man's character, be is up against, as the ward debater would say, “ a tough Where shall 1 comp! ot }or the gentleman? 2% Proposition. whic darken all night and howls and keeps iny No. Such a thinker is obliged to disregard the records of the mission ftelds, |* sic yusband ewahe” Sore: B.Bs { eeu a:Seepe et: atitiem pais (et eam ab the Women's hospitals, the women’s refuges, women's colleges and woman's ‘The French. am very antious to have my voles cultivated Which army low the mon in the Prench aol| Do you think fe tomar? oC Me constant work for her sex through the press and from the platform. He will draw bis conclusions from the quarrels of a woman's whist club and from the everyday feverish struggle of otherwise idle women for pre-eminence in fociety and style of anxious thought? | have « eo bright boy of fifteen, now school. We live very nicely and in « very good neighborhood. There are few peopie hereabouts who do not own their own property. My husband is a book- neover ‘My worry ie this: Shall I keep my boy at school for several wmars yet, or thal! 1 do a2 seme of my relatives urge of leness for him, no matter how much etucation he has ‘AM of the boye around here attend hook. Would not these lade refuse te sociate with him if he ta put to w and seen coming to and fre in working clothes? My mind je torn with canfiict- {ng emotions 1 must confess at this point that we have never been able to fave any money. It has cost so much to keep up appearances, “If you reply through The Fvening World, no doubt your advice would ben ‘The man who has a trade is @ Chew ‘learns a trade should fellow it all his/ sand times better equipped than the life Having acquired useful knowledge man who nas none, for he feel within | does not bind him fown to it if his tal- hin breast the Independent feeling that ente in later years bid him rise higher. he need never want. He can find profit-| Our ablest men began life humbly able work In any part pf the world | Ben Jenson was a bricklayer; John A MORAL POINTED BY EXPERTS (Pinere wen PF itequnte Bmowen) Good trates are the stepping-stones to success, respectability and happiness, The parents who endow their sons with & good trade have given them that| | Which no one can take from them, and have started their feet in the right pal Young men who have been bolstered up all their lives are seldom good for any crisin, If they find themselves confront: 4 by @iMoulties they look about for No parents should feel thar it betittles their digntty or thetr standing In a com- munity to lay the foundation of sound principles in the heart of their boy and show him the path by which the wisert and truest men have ollmbed to great- ness and wealth and bid him enter It. If @ ied hee mastered his trade ant finds it te not to his liking he is still young enough to begin to study a pro- feaston, but he who waite to do either until he has reached his majority may | not have an opportunity or feet Incline! “"d THINK WE MAD BETTER GET MARRIED." ague glazier of liberty, equality, sober and give his wages te hia The great problems of human rights, the fraternity, filled his mind and heart. To kee mother he took as a matter of course. But the times were not few when in ‘he s:noke of his noonday pipe, or tm the brief twilight that ushered tn bis nisht of healthy sleep, he saw bimeelf ta his own cory home with Mamie Muldoon as his bride. All this was before he turned the corner. death. Joe came home from work one night and found her terribly fll. month, Those four weeks for Annie ( {+11 weeks of constant nursing. No Sister o She was sick o for poor, ungifted Annie Odell, were the Vell was ever more devoted. Jog, German war, NTO 1 nurse “Molino.” What te the way to pronounce the same ‘*10!- teeart There Are O72 Mahomete (hen Mabometame He recognizes, perhaps, a Jniia Ward Howe, a Mra Bushnell, a Mm | Ce A ee ee a Booth, an E th Cady Stanton, a Lady Henry Somerset, a Frances Will- [FPR cee ared Last Your, No. and, aS n 1. Anthouy, but bas no mind for the millions of the same sex CAG oY MeKene releum@ woo make loving sacrifices unsung and do taeir great good work eee! ai hs SUN eat rus that the stars of womanhood do shine! | en Ge overt ceoar Lal Gs But happier for all of us, of one Yes. 8. E. Groos, Chicago. Te there any oftrial ex and of the other, that the average woman lives a “a a well and fe there @ metoty of Bons of the Americus (the kidneppat boy) was ever tou’ ant retored sheds her dear just ver the home and the refuge, where health dwells and Revetetion? Wie is tts General Secretary? te bts y Where sickness invades, tender, gentle, brave, sympathetic—and, never con- | RELA WETHOS per Fourth Ave temptuous. | Por all that [s beautiful tn woman we forgive her the trailing skirt, and Yet we would that it trailed not AMBITION IS VAIN WITHOI'T WORK Mamma—Why do you ery, my dear You have a chocolete letter as well as Father—Well, marry him then! But Daughter—Fathe:, I cannot live without Arthur! — ' you'll receive no money from me! No; Net Until He In Thirty-@ Je tt peastble to become President of the United Gastes at tho age of twonty-sight! AG. PORTER. For whet purpres are tnt on the wem site of Park Row telew Ge | bridge? JONIN ATES A Womans, Mre. Stannard. te Jedrea Strange Winter, the suitor, o mam Tes. ‘Wi o etvil marriage performed ta Sew York | Ida Yes, but her name's Marie! Fidele iMlaetter. Daughter— ¥ cannot live without — “haat or a wemes? Is tet the author’ | name? To the Editor of The Evening World = sf es, but Arthur Butz a Oey, meen pakke is ob tall 0b 6 HOG Sond aa ours rel samt 1 am twenty-four years of age Have worked th an office for three years. Yeo: tt Me te “ant S | M@entioman” Alone ts Setfetent Have never been rained either in ary oF ponith » Am receiving fair mnlary, pnaaanaamameeneeeOMCeOOOeeeeeres. *. teetttiett -ein ott yet [fear it's aw of Lime, where probably were I to look for wf position ate 3 > ¢ os eR Bh usaad Pe oer T could advance myself I know I am ambitious, and it disgusts me to go over| f WOMAN'S LEARNING fg WHY HE RISKED HIS LIFE IN LOVE'S KEEPING. f)0e | ety teceMifew vine, | at fa bonne Gey the same thing day by day AMBITIONS 1 woman t educated whos bf i OLD me - litte away from ngs ae not mal to the success of LAA ANDACTONOOEO -MOTARROMEBOR; | the wort Ric Re Peo: db Marcas ace a ares Rar nel as MY HIS young gentleman belongs to the great order of the hopping-up fil wagtmnent of 5 fan 1POOOOORO: " ick eae ee voek hand Fittieth streets, and-down. It is eutirely probable that for some years to come he y Ho ma | Rage - CTT NATURAL, pa ars to urna clinging; ‘Where was Columbia University before tt wee MUN Tat fia vagis youraings 10 atrince baat rear he will have, © 5 N the rank and file of the army, ee-| yelled, te Ueamnnt of Ge company. Tt rye bird with tte breast 0 the ‘ removed to Morninge:ce? wana (delbicbicebichiciciciebicet- bist i Tou’ Cj gradually lessening periods of disgust over doing the same daily| peak" Midi rainy NO & letter trom Ce ESS biue singeth oweet, aa are the ie 4 Wak ealine. ‘Teat o gs pines, no subject is more frequently! “Well,” repited O'Malley over hie Put. the stare never answer | Twe Opinions of Father Whe Pee Ings for a fa r Nhat eventually he will settle into the NOT PARTICULAR, commented upon than Gen Otis's em: | shoulder, “T might jest as well be killed fer Read! Same rut with his daily tasks and will finally come to his deathbed in the treme consclentiousness i matiors of as have Gen. Ot!e a runnin’ me up hil T ope pope ea bare! ea | Meroe: Bane ee sical full possession of his mental faculties, undisturbed by dreams of time un | pecty detall and down dale and comin’ over to me lead us astray; Hehe? ia ping Dole ee Seshbe, During an advance on the north line house fvery mornin’ and & myin’. ame thorn’s in the red of the burns bie son's books ent beats him for epeat> All this ts probable unless (he younr man tells the truth when he signs ‘Bie note “Ambitious.” In that case he will begin to do bis work, not with but with a spirit which wi!!! earn his employers’ consideration. And as de of the road for ehelter from ermint for the haveysackT’ directed volleys of the tneur- recently om company bad te ite down “O'Malley, why don't you pay the Gov- ‘Then he calmly walked on and got rose of the May— Lad me to love. dear, and teach me to prey. | gents the iogt piece of property, and, as he tag his evenings at tome rweeting get exten tmeteed of rensing the etrects at night and ‘Seana ing ite," tint De fe urwerthy of the seme “Parer.” Inter, vatere te treakise, Mew Oo The corner was Mra, Gordon's 4 | One of the privates had @ropped Bis! came back and sat down just in time havermack in the middie of the road away to escape a vollny of Mausera, he threw |ack, and after the company had Iain | the haversnck on the ground and said och an igrornmus of 8 men have ooh o ome You foolish mun’ Ail you oxa to reel OM beloved books in price! A MOTHER oF ¢ amb ‘To the Bitter of Thx Evening Worl: pemawhile he will Improve bis time and his mind together by means of | study and observation, so that if be (s bound toward other oppor-| he will know them when he sees them No man advances himself by merely thinking of so doing He trains| if for climbing as an athlete trains for racing, by developing his need- th. Then he takes hold of its first ladder and climbs Ambition dog, but hard work is his trainer. | | Hold me a little away from the wort, Dear arms! with your firm clasp and tender; For the lights on the heights stream through desolate nights A tempest of tears In the splen- dor ‘Tis the gleam and the dream that would lead us astray, ‘The keen thorns have crimeoned the roves of May— Laad me to love, dear, and teach me to pray. | down he calmly stood up and walked «ang hen he Joes come to-morrow + | down the road towant the lost haver mornin’ te me house Ml ‘Os me sack He made @ fine target fer the! itttie man you're dead wrong. | neber Insurgegts and the bullets rattied around Jost no havergack. There's your Woody, him pretty itvely 4A pote bag Take it to the Gover Here, come back here, O'Maiiey,"! mint with me ovmpiiments.’” | FIVARCE. 0% fathers ao the man whe won't frat, Perhaps this fatier improved telleet by rreding time novels and refined Weratur:. wtih would certali for ibe gree: seourt of fine sent make Posstbly it be woute Dieters, Thackeray, fot) Meney ent some more of oar noted frets, bt would ffl te find mong dhasteter equs! (> him in Ceprivity, ad ne oe ror noTn. ' “Which do you think is of the brain or bone and CREAT SCRAPPER. “Quite « mammoth cat, Digas. | @0 you call him? “Com Paul “Because he has whiskers?’ “Yen, and because he licks every Eng- ‘Mab bulldog on the evenue,” What “L wonder Who ji was that first used | “Everybody ought to oppose these get- the expreasion, “One man's as good as rich-quick schemes.” another? Was ita poet or a physician?” | “I don't know about that; 14 Uke te} Mammy—Tan dem. “I guess it was an old maid!"—Das| make a fortune while I'm alive (9 en-| Stonewall—Tandem? Ah ain't talkin’ Kiene Witsdlatt. dey it.” “Bout bisickles, messang, She—The muses have kivsed me. He—! would have done the same in uett plage —iegpemberter Bineeen, il, it depen/a on who you | You are an inventor, brain, cher, pone end sinew.” | barela at prrnciping 4